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A feast for the senses

By Sun Xiaochen| China Daily| Updated :2023-08-04

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Clockwise from left: Student-athletes practice Chinese calligraphy at the interactive experience center of the Chengdu FISU World University Games Village. Members of the Moldovan delegation enjoy a photo opportunity using a Sichuan Opera installation as a prop. Participants of the Chengdu games experience a traditional Chinese medicine treatment. ZHANG WEI/CHINA DAILY/XINHUA

Diverse array of delectable distractions ensure games participants are never short of entertainment

With so much on offer in the athletes' village and across Chengdu, participants from around the world have been treated to a diverse blend of Chinese culture and Sichuan specialties during the FISU World University Games.

With competitions in full swing at the games, a wide range of cultural activities have complemented the action to entertain participants during their downtime, with events such as calligraphy, traditional Chinese medicine treatments and visits to the city's famous giant panda breeding center providing fun and immersive experiences.

At the midway point in the games, the interactive experience center at the athletes' village has proved to be the most popular destination for foreign visitors. The center's abundant cultural activities are designed to allow student-athletes and delegation officials to get to know Chengdu and China better while also having fun during competition breaks.

Lucie Kalhousova and her teammates on the Czech women's volleyball team have paid frequent visits to the culture bazaar at the center. Kalhousova has even picked up a new hobby in Chinese calligraphy after learning how to write her name in Mandarin characters with brushes.

"We had never tried it before, so it's lucky and fun for everyone to experience it," she said.

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Clockwise from top left: Tai chi classes have proven popular with the student-athletes at the Chengdu games; An athlete shows off a Chinese knot he acquired as a souvenir; Athletes pose with the games' mascot, Rongbao, at the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding; A traditional lion dance entertains visitors to the theater at the athletes' village; An athlete learns how to play the bamboo flute; Visitors to the giant panda research base wear panda-themed Sichuan Opera masks. WEI XIAOHAO/ZHANG WEI/CHINA DAILY

Brazilian taekwondo athlete Lucas Krishna has also been unwinding with a traditional pastime — playing Chinese chess with a local volunteer.

Krishna revealed that his father, who undertook a three-month training course in Chinese chess years ago in Hangzhou, taught him the traditional game at the age of 10.

"My dad loves China. The people here are so nice," Krishna added.

Away from the athletes' village, participants have been discovering that Chengdu is a city with much to offer. Top of people's must-do lists are trips to the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, where visitors get to see the rare species up close and take part in a variety of panda-themed activities.

Wearing Sichuan Opera masks painted with cute panda faces, visitors to the center commonly hail the experience as a lifelong memory. It also sparks their interest in trying more events across the city.

To promote traditional Chinese music and opera, among other art forms, the theater at the athletes' village stages intricately choreographed shows for residents.

"It's gorgeous, like traveling through 3,000 years to witness the fusion of culture and emotion, musical instruments, and human voices," said David Anthony Knopp, deputy head of the United States delegation, after enjoying a musical show on Tuesday.